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HappinessCharge PreCure! (ハピネスチャージプリキュア!, HapinesuChāji PuriKyua!), also called HappinessCharge Pretty Cure! or Happiness Charge PC, is a 2014 Japanese magical girl anime series produced by Toei Animation, and the eleventh installment in Izumi Todo's Pretty Cure metaseries, released to celebrate the franchise's 10th anniversary. [1]
Wonderful Pretty Cure! (Japanese: わんだふるぷりきゅあ!, Hepburn: Wandafuru Purikyua!, Wonderful PreCure!) [a] is a Japanese magical girl anime television series produced by Toei Animation. It is the twenty-first installment in the Pretty Cure franchise and its first entry with a title written in hiragana. [2]
Nagisa is a 14/15-year-old teenage girl with fair skin, dark ginger hair, and hazel eyes. She usually wears Verone Academy's female school uniform, which consists of a red blazer worn over a dark red shirt with a white undershirt, a blue striped bow, and a teal plaid skirt, along with black socks and brown loafers.
Go! Princess Pretty Cure (Go!プリンセスプリキュア, Gō! Purinsesu Purikyua), also known simply as Go! Princess PreCure, is a 2015 Japanese magical girl anime series produced by Toei Animation, and the twelfth installment to Izumi Todo's Pretty Cure metaseries, featuring the tenth generation of Cures. [1]
In case her messaging was unclear, the Serbian artist wore a white sculptural column dress that, when her arms were outstretched, opened out into a peace sign. World-famous for her seemingly ...
Rina Koike as the young Kyoka Ota, a girl from Minami's neighborhood who sometimes visits to help out around the house. Urara Awata as Kyoka Ota, Nanami's mother. She and Asahi move from Hiroshima to Tokyo after their marriage. Asami Katsura as Sachiko Furuta, Minami's coworker who helps her make a copy of the dress in the shop window.
In Japanese popular culture, a bishōjo (美少女, lit. "beautiful girl"), also romanized as bishojo or bishoujo, is a cute girl character. Bishōjo characters appear ubiquitously in media including manga, anime, and computerized games (especially in the bishojo game genre), and also appear in advertising and as mascots, such as for maid cafés.
Some pushed back on the multi-colored rosary, claiming a resemblance to the pride flag; however, the rosary's colors are from the World Mission rosary created by Fulton Sheen. [ 2 ] [ 13 ] [ 14 ] Ken Iikura-Gross of Anime News Network compared the Catholic Church's use of an anime mascot to Buddy Christ from the 1999 film Dogma . [ 15 ]